Wednesday, May 23
Tuesday, May 22
L'Eclipse
I write from the 8e.
at 12:53
Sunday, May 20
UEFA Trophy
Chelsea, improbably, remarkably, win the UEFA Champions League, defeating Bayern Munich, making Chelsea the best club team in Europe (Interim manager Roberto Di Matteo holds the Cup, snapped from the TV). The game a tense back-and forth until Bayern sinks one at 82 minutes. It looks over but Chelsea's Didier Drogba sling-shots a dramatic 88th minute header and the game enters extra time tied, 1-1. Eitan notes (already past his bedtime): "It's going to be a late night."
Neither team can capitalise on the 30 minutes of overage and so. .. to penalty kicks, which has left England bereft on so many occasions. Five strikers selected from each team; the winner takes all. Chelsea misses the first PK and Munich hits their first three. But then Bayern misses and it comes down to the very last shot : Drogba , of course, who - without a moment's pause nor doubt - slams it home. Joy! As Chelsea race on to the pitch. Sorrow, as the Germans collapse in tears, stunned.
Eitan and I pump our fists and jump up and down : A victory for Chelsea is a win for England. Now to the European Cup and summer Olympics.
Eitan: "Can I watch a bit of Sunday morning cartoons?"
Me: "No."
Eitan: "Why not? I hardly ever watch any TV."
Me: "You watched football all day yeterday."
Eitan: "Yeah, but that doesn't count."
Me: "Oh? Football isn't on TV is it?"
Eitan: "But it's not the bad kind of TV. It's not bad for your brain or anything."
Me: "The answer is still no."
Eitan: "Give me one good reason then."
Me: "Because I said so."
Eitan: "That's not a reason."
Me: "It is the only reason that counts."
Eitan: "So I can't watch cartoons then?"
Madeleine: "What are you going to get mum for her birthday?"
Me: "Nothing."
Madeleine: "What? Really? She's your wife, Dad."
Me: "I just don't like to make a big deal of these things, that's all."
Madeleine: "She is your own wife, Dad."
at 13:03
Saturday, May 19
Stan And A Mortgage
Stan with us for Sonnet's Ballgowns and the Queen, God bless. He is in great shape, too - jogging a couple miles each morning or a long walk. We were together last month for Marcus's wedding, which already seems ages ago.
Me: "It's tough being a young person these days.. . "
Eitan, Madeleine:
Me: "Buying a house, for instance. It has become very difficult to buy your first home."
Eitan, Madeleine:
Me: "How do you buy a house anyway?"
Madeleine: "How should I know Dad?"
Me: "What do you need, I mean?"
Eitan: "Money?"
Me: "Good. But what if you don't have it?"
Madeleine: "You can get it from your parents. Or steal it?"
Me: "Let's be a little less creative please. Where else do you think?"
Eitan: "You could borrow it from a bank."
Me: "Excellent. Now let's say the house is worth, like, a million pounds.. . "
Madeleine: "I have £320 .. ."
Me: "Say it's a million pounds and you have to borrow the money. What do you think the bank looks for before giving you the dough?"
Eitan, Madeleine:
Me: "Will they lend to anybody ? Most likely they will lend a million pounds to ...
Madeleine: "Somebody who will give it back!"
Eitan: "So they will look at your job."
Madeleine: "So, if you're ,like, a butcher or something, the bank will give you a million pounds?"
Me: "What are some other things ?"
Madeleine: "How long you've been a butcher?"
Me: "Good work. The bank will also look at your credit card and make sure you always pay up on time. Can you think of anything else?"
Eitan: "If you're rich?"
Me: "How about the value of the house ? If the house is worth £100 and the bank lending you a million, does that make them happy?"
Madeleine: "I guess so if they gave you all that money."
Me: "If you can't repay the loan what happens?"
Eitan, Madeleine:
Me: "The bank will take your house."
Madeleine: "So you mean the bank is going to take our house?"
Me: "Let's hope not. This is a lot to take in so let's think about these things a bit. It may one day be important to you."
Madeleine: "So can I have some ice cream now ?"
Me: "Go for it."
at 13:13
Friday, May 18
The Shakespears work the kitchen.
Facebook goes public at 38 bucks a share valuing the company at $100 billion, give or take. Since I am one of 900 million FB users, investors think I am worth $111. Give or take. I am with Pierre Michel, a French tech banker in London, who is sceptical of the offering and who can blame him ? I do suggest that if not P M, who champions European entrepreneurialism and venture capital , then who ? The nasty jealousies felt 5,000 miles away.
So today Facebook creates five billionaires and 1,000 millionaires while providing California with $2 billion of much needed, and deserved, taxes. The funds should go straight to California's once world-leading public universities but, alas, Jerry will probably apply it towards the state deficit.
Pierre Michel and I talk about FB and he notes the US system rigged while IPOs are about luck as much as hard-work. I ponder this but do not agree : if Silicon Valley rigged, why does it attract top talent and capital despite a 95% investment failure rate ? As for luck. . well, of course - but one creates one's own luck. Europe's venture market 10% of the US, and so less chance for .. luck. While the Western World mis-steps from war to financial meltdown to recession to crisis, Silicon Valley continues to present opportunity for those who embrace it. And work hard. Starting with kitchen.
at 17:10
Thursday, May 17
Airport
I love these two schleppers, who plop down across from me, 7AM, Terminal 5. They scheme about this and that and how they are going to make money so I cannot help but listen in. Despite a lack of sleep and feeling grumpy, I appreciate their mood : in spite of everything, the world yet an oyster, and they are going to get some of it whatever, or wherever, it may be.
Meetings in Munich take me from the late morning into the early evening. Since my return flight 9PM, I check my suit and tie at the airport service centre and jog around the parking lot. Day trips are hard work. I meet several large family clients, including the Flicks, who own 20% of Daimler AG and built a fortune supplying industrial materials to Hitler and the German army. Not sure how you reconcile that one but money helps. The family owns one of the largest collections of modern art anywhere.
Munich hosting the UEFA Champions League final Saturday which pits Chelsea against Bayer Munich. Since the home team playing, well, at home the city wild with anticipation . .. I am informed that a seat at Allianz Arena going for €30,000 on the scalper's market. Other outdoor venues , showing the game on jumbotrons, also sold out.
Me: "Ok, kids, time for bed and tomorrow it's Friday and then the weekend."
Eitan: "And swimming Sunday morning."
Madeleine: "I hate the week end."
Eitan: "I don't like it either."
Me: "Well, if it's a bummer, that's the way life goes."
Madeleine: "You are not making it any better."
Me: "The weekend?"
Madeleine: "Life."
Meetings in Munich take me from the late morning into the early evening. Since my return flight 9PM, I check my suit and tie at the airport service centre and jog around the parking lot. Day trips are hard work. I meet several large family clients, including the Flicks, who own 20% of Daimler AG and built a fortune supplying industrial materials to Hitler and the German army. Not sure how you reconcile that one but money helps. The family owns one of the largest collections of modern art anywhere.
Munich hosting the UEFA Champions League final Saturday which pits Chelsea against Bayer Munich. Since the home team playing, well, at home the city wild with anticipation . .. I am informed that a seat at Allianz Arena going for €30,000 on the scalper's market. Other outdoor venues , showing the game on jumbotrons, also sold out.
Me: "Ok, kids, time for bed and tomorrow it's Friday and then the weekend."
Eitan: "And swimming Sunday morning."
Madeleine: "I hate the week end."
Eitan: "I don't like it either."
Me: "Well, if it's a bummer, that's the way life goes."
Madeleine: "You are not making it any better."
Me: "The weekend?"
Madeleine: "Life."
at 20:22
Age 11
An awkward age for sure - gangly limbs and big feet , not quite fitting in nor knowing one's place - yet Eitan handles himself with aplomb if not a little dignity. He is still a kid, afterall , yet adoloscence around the corner. No ducking that, try as he may.
"God had to create disco music so I could be born and be successful."--Donna Summer, who passed away, age 63
at 19:54
Ballgowns Opens
Sonnet's Ballgowns goes off with a bang Tuesday evening at the red-carpet opening gala and we are surrounded by the Great and the good. Also Russians and long legs but who's looking? I bring the kids and Kamila and Stan who is with us for the week. By coincidence, the Queen is in Richmond Park and drives by our house - the kids off from school to see her and play in the make-shift wonder-land complete with helter skelter. I can only think of Monty Python.
Ballgowns includes 60 British evening designs from the V and A's collection: Victor Stiebel, Zandra Rhodes, Jonathan Saunders, Alexandre McQueen ... Ralph and Russo, who I chat with by another Beyonce bespoke. Most famously displayed : Diana's 'Elvis Dress' by Catherine Walker. My favorite : a beautiful latex fetish by Japanese designers Atsuko Kudo who is (of course) married to an Englishman. Sonnet has been scrambling around giving interviews with the FT, Style and the Guardian and appearing on the BBC. Martin Roth, the Museum Director, makes a speech and the show's sponsor, Coutts bank CEO Alexander Clausen, tells us "glamour is growth industry." The kids are appropriately impressed, and I let Madeleine walk about with my camera and, accordingly, get a bunch of shots of shoes and mid-riffs. One forgets a kids' perspective.
But perspective, indeed. The exhibition opens in the newly renovated Fashion Gallery and it all sparkles. As Kamila notes: "The Queen and this - I cannot believe my day". And I must agree with her : surrounded by friends , family and colleagues : Sonnet does us proud.
at 19:43
Tuesday, May 15
A Cubic Mile Of Oil
My photo from somewhere in the UK, 2007. I pulled off the motor route on to a dirt road (kids in back seat) to take this shot. There are lived-in homes within 100 meters of the reactors.
As per one-billion, I am keen to understand how much energy the planet uses, you know, like, collectively. I started my career working energy deals at First Boston and we converted natural gas to oil-barrel equivalents using a standard formula but what about tons of coal, British thermal units and volts, amps and watts ?
American engineer Hewitt Crane, as reported in the New Yorker, wondered the same thing in '74 during the Mideast oil crisis. He came up with a new measure of energy consumption : a three-dimensional unit he called a 'cubic mile of oil.' One cubic mile of oil would fill a pool that is a mile long, a mile wide, and a mile deep. Today, it takes three cubic miles' worth of fossil fuels to power the world for a year. That's a trillion gallons of gas ( or 1000000000000000000, Brit style). To replace one cubic mile with a source of non-carbon producing energy - like nuclear power - would require the construction of a new atomic plant every week for fifty years.
Climate experts have argued that we should stop emitting greenhouse gases within fifty years, but by then the demand for energy could easily be three times what it is today : nine cubic miles of oil. Our Grand kids will be in their youth at then.
at 15:58
Sunday, May 13
Cheers To Tears
Eitan and Madeleine watch ManU vs. Sunderland in the final game of the Premiere League season. Arch rival Manchester City plays Queens Park Rangers. Since ManU and ManC in a dead-tie for first place but ManC has a favourable goal difference, QPR must beat, or tie, ManC while ManU must defeat Sunderland for ManU to win the trophy. When I took this photo, ManU up 1-nil and, improbably, QPR winning 2-1. Then calamity : with five minutes left in their game ManC draw (ManU still in place to be champions). ManU wins their game - cheers! - and we switch channels the instant ManC .. scores.. the Premiere winning goal .. .with . no . . time left in the game. Tears. I tell you, it is like watching the Bears.
Unlike the Bears, Man City has Sheikh Mansour , who bought the club in 2008 and has spent nearly £1B in the transfer market to get some of the game's biggest stars (Rooney almost crossed lines but, in an emotional moment, committed the rest of his career to the Red Devils). And all that money counts : Man City's last Premiere Cup 44 years ago.
Me: "Is this the hardest defeat Manchester United has ever suffered."
Eitan: "Yeah, probably."
Me: "Even worse than the UEFA Cup final vs. Barcelona ? [We watched the game at a bar in Greenwich Village, Manhattan] All those people looked at me funny because you were crying so much."
Eitan: "That one was pretty bad."
Madeleine: "You don't have to get angry with me Eitan."
Me: "Leave your sister alone."
Eitan:
Madeleine: "See Eitan. Only Mom and Dad can get angry with me."
at 17:24
Saturday, May 12
5.76650391 × 10^131
But let us keep going .. here is one trillion dollars (in zeros, the Brits say 1000000000000000000 while the Yankees, 1000000000000. The difference? The British count a billion as a million million; the Americans count a billion as 1000 million) and how it looks graphically :
And the debt owed by US govt at December , 2011, you ask? That is $15T :
Graphics from kpleptocracy.us
at 13:51
More Fun
Eitan completes the 3.5 mile (as the crow flies) "Fun Run" in a time of 21.48, good enough for first place in the school and second-place overall. Rusty crosses the line third and I am forth, pulled along all the way. My photo of the boys includes Ian, the Headmaster of the school (he's the one on the left).
at 12:56
Douchebag
Eitan and I to run the school "Fun Run", which is three miles (reduced from five) through Richmond Park starting at Sheen Gate. Eitan's stated ambition to win, so I kid him : he must beat me first.
at 08:31
Friday, May 11
Ralph And Russo And Beyonce
Not surprisingly Ralph & Russo working with Sonnet, who will display one of their coutures in her Ballgown exhibition. Others who have worn Ralph And Russo : Angelina Jolie, Eva Longoria, Penelope Cruz, Kelly Brook and Elizabeth Hurley though, unfortunately, none have found their way to the Mortlake Business Centre. Go figure. Photo from Michael.
at 15:13
Mortlake Green
Rusty gets excited about the week end.
Eitan and I have dinner mano-a-mano (Sonnet at a museum opening w/ Madeleine). Eitan a private kid so I find myself making most of the conversation. He is uncomfortable when I ask him to lead our discussion or, even, the subject matter. Once the table cleared, though, he seems reluctant to leave and so I wait silently. I am rewarded for my patience.
at 14:48
Moe, 1962
From the Peace Corps' first facebook:
ORENSTEIN, MORTON, 26, is a lawyer from St. Louis. He received his formal education at University City High School, Northwestern University, and the University of Michigan Law School, maintaining consistently high averages at all three. After receiving his LL. B. in June 1961, he practiced civil law with a firm in St. Louis until he entered the army for six months in January of this year, where he served in the Judge Advocate General's Office. His summer jobs have ranged from legal clerk to machine operator to camp counselor. Mr. Orenstein's leisure interests lead him outdoors as often as possible to enjoy camping, hiking, hunting and fishing. He has traveled in Europe for a short period of time."
at 13:19
Thursday, May 10
Vidal
Britain notes the passing of Sephardic Jew and early hard-knocks East Ender Vidal Sassoon, inventor of the 'bob', and part of the original "Cool Britannia" - one of the top icons of the Swinging Sixties with the Beatles, Carnaby Street, Twiggy and the Union Jack, says hair designer and friend Nicky Clarke in today's Times. Sassoon threw out the daily maintenance required for the 1950s perm or "beehive" - my Grandmother - preferring "wash and go" styles that liberated women from the hair salon , freeing their time to smoke Virginia Slims, roll marijuana cigarettes and participate in free love. Also work. Sassoon, of course, made instantly famous from Twiggy followed by Mary Quant then Roman Polanski's "Rosemary's Baby" where he was flown to LA to create Mia Farrow's pixie cut. He never looked back.
I love this photo of Sassoon, from the ap, especially the tie and matching kerchief. From a hair salon on Bond St to a £300 million fortune : he was an original.
"If you don't look good, we don't look good."
--Vidal Sassoon
at 16:42
Wednesday, May 9
The Coach
David coaches the Sheen Lions.
Driving to football practice.
Me: "So, Jack, does your dad embarrass you?"
Jack: "Yeah, I guess so."
Me: "Like what does he do?"
Jack: "I don't know. He talks all the time and stuff."
Me: "That doesn't sound too bad."
Eitan: "He doesn't wear his swimming suit to drive us to football."
Me: "It's because I couldn't find my running shorts. So who is the coolest dad?"
Eitan: "David."
Me: "Why's that?"
Eitan: "Um, he's witty."
Me: "I'm witty. I just made a wit an hour ago."
Eitan: "And he doesn't, like, sing in front of Joe's friends."
Me: "Fair enough."
Jack: "He's a football coach too."
Me:
Eitan: "Can you keep Rusty on the lead during football practise? It's kind of distracting when he runs after the trains."
Me: "I'm not putting the dog on a lead in a park."
Eitan: "Well can you at least go on a really long run then?"
Driving to football practice.
Me: "So, Jack, does your dad embarrass you?"
Jack: "Yeah, I guess so."
Me: "Like what does he do?"
Jack: "I don't know. He talks all the time and stuff."
Me: "That doesn't sound too bad."
Eitan: "He doesn't wear his swimming suit to drive us to football."
Me: "It's because I couldn't find my running shorts. So who is the coolest dad?"
Eitan: "David."
Me: "Why's that?"
Eitan: "Um, he's witty."
Me: "I'm witty. I just made a wit an hour ago."
Eitan: "And he doesn't, like, sing in front of Joe's friends."
Me: "Fair enough."
Jack: "He's a football coach too."
Me:
Eitan: "Can you keep Rusty on the lead during football practise? It's kind of distracting when he runs after the trains."
Me: "I'm not putting the dog on a lead in a park."
Eitan: "Well can you at least go on a really long run then?"
at 21:04
RFH - Inside
The interior public space at the Royal Festival Hall, where I camp for a few hours to work and write some emails, pictured, buzzy with mothers, non-profiteers, students, artists and a few old age pensioners. Several coffee shops do a brisk business (the friendly African who serves my espresso spills about half on my (new , white) lacoste and I am more concerned about him being in trouble than my shirt as the manager offers to pay for it). The space fills with light , despite the grey day, and offers electrical sockets and telecoms ports, free wi-fi and all sorts of cool stuff from film (matinees!) to theatre and music and dance. Best, the northward facing windows have big views of the Thames from Charing Cross to Waterloo Bridge and beyond.
at 16:03
Susannah And Megan
"Susannah And Her Bath" painted by Francesco Hayez in 1850 and displayed at The National Gallery. It pre-dates Megan Fox by 160 years.
A curator describes the portrait to a bunch of eager sixth formers : "The virtuous Susannah (she says) "bathes in her garden and is approached by two corrupt elders who, lusting for her, threaten to accuse her of adultery if she does not give into their demands. She refuses and is falsely accused by them, but her innocence is proved, preventing her from being stoned."
Here is Megan Fox in Rolling Stone magazine :
A curator describes the portrait to a bunch of eager sixth formers : "The virtuous Susannah (she says) "bathes in her garden and is approached by two corrupt elders who, lusting for her, threaten to accuse her of adultery if she does not give into their demands. She refuses and is falsely accused by them, but her innocence is proved, preventing her from being stoned."
Here is Megan Fox in Rolling Stone magazine :
at 15:42
Subscribe to:
Posts - Jeff Orenstein's weblog